Friday, April 29, 2016

Yay Cork Flooring!



 We finally bit the bullet and purchased the cork flooring that I've wanted ever since I found out that our first floor does not have hard wood hiding under the carpeting.  I spent a long time researching cork before deciding that the pros outweighed the cons.  I got a lot of really good information from thissortaoldlife.com.  If you are considering buying cork you definitely need to read this post.  I like that cork is softer, warmer, and more comfortable to stand on than my other flooring choices.  But mostly, I just love the way it looks.  I decided on the type of cork flooring that I wanted, Wicanders Originals Accent.  I found it in a store semi-near me and checked it out in person.  I then waited a year, just for fun.  Then I shopped around on the internet and found two sites that were competitive in price and contacted them both over the phone.  I felt more comfortable with the first site I had visited, but their price was several hundred dollars more.  When discussing my order with both sites I mentioned that I was shopping around and the site I liked better immediately lowered their price by several hundred dollars.  To save on shipping I chose to unload the flooring from the truck myself.  This morning when the truck pulled up I was prepared to jump in the back and start handing boxes down to Tim.  Luckily the truck driver said he'd use his lift to lower the pallet to the street.  This option was the $50 shipping upgrade I had said no to, and here we got it for free because the driver didn't want to wait around for us to unload the entire pallet one box at a time.  Yay free money!

Sofia was extra helpful during this process.  I believe each box weighs about as much as she does.


The flooring weighed about thirteen hundred pounds and took about ten minutes to carry inside.



Now it is going to live in our dining room until we have a chance to move it to a slightly more hidden location.  We aren't ready to install quite yet.


This was today's favorite thing!

Isn't it pretty?




Monday, April 25, 2016

Too Many Yellows!


Too many yellow paint colors, and none of them quite right!  I know Tim wants me to stop wasting money on paint samples, but I can't find just the right yellow for our built in book shelves.  And I still haven't decided on the white for the living room walls.  I'm so fearful of making the wrong choice that I'm having trouble making any choices at all!

Sunday, April 24, 2016

Building a Raised Garden Bed for $15

Last year I tried to start a garden in the backyard.  I began by starting seeds indoors and then transferred them to a small area in the yard where I removed the grass.  I must have done something wrong because the only plants that survived and thrived were three tomato plants.  The rest of the plants died almost immediately or were choked out by weeds.  This year I have decided to keep the tomatoes where they were last year but I also want to add some raised beds.  Although I prefer the look of traditional gardens I like the idea of a method that requires less work.  However, I am extremely cheap and don't want to shell out the money it would cost to buy a prefab raised bed, or even to buy the materials for a do-it-yourself raised bed.  So I went to Craigslist and stalked the free section for months collecting as many old bricks as I could get my hands on.  I did end up purchasing weed blocking landscape fabric to put under the raised beds and a landscaping adhesive to stick the bricks together.  I bought THIS TYPE of adhesive that looks a lot like a tube of caulk.  I got the tube home and went to put it in my caulk gun.  That's when I realized that I was going to need a bigger gun!  I went back to Home Depot and bought this bad boy!

I feel a little bad for my puny old caulking gun!

I laid out the landscaping fabric and started placing my bricks.


I wanted each bed to be around six feet long and three feet wide.  I'm hoping to fit three beds along the chicken's fence.  I feel that my way of building the raised beds must be the most slap dash method in existence!  I eyeballed the whole thing and was halfway through with the first bed before I even knew it.

Looks good enough for me!


It is at this point that I realized I should have planned better.  I like the way my raised bed looks, kind of old and worn, but when you don't plan in advance you inevitably run into trouble.  I completely neglected to prepare the bricks.  These are old bricks.  Most had been stored outside for years.  I was having so much fun building the wall and was in such a hurry to get my beds completed that I didn't think about the fact that these bricks were dirty.  When gluing them together with the landscaping adhesive some of the bricks had so much dirt on them that the adhesive was sticking to the dirt instead of the bricks!  I decided to wait until the curing time for my adhesive was over and see if my walls would remain standing.  Luckily, most of the bricks were stuck tight, but a few came right off in my hands.  I took a few days to spray down the bricks to clean off the majority of the dirt before continuing.

Wouldn't these make an awesome patio?

I also stopped by my friend's house to collect a few more bricks.  After cleaning them all I got back to work.


Note the wood board behind the second raised bed.  My chickens are dumb as rocks and were actually eating the landscaping adhesive.  None of them suffered any ill effects, but now as I work I have to put this out to block the chickens from sticking their heads through the fence and eating glue.


By the third bed my garden walls were looking pretty wonky.  The bricks for this one were not all the same size and the ground is a bit uneven here.  Oh well, as long as it holds dirt I'm fine with some wobbly walls.


I love the detail on these bottom bricks (thanks Nicole!) and the bright yellow one makes me smile.


The raised beds aren't quite as tall as I wanted.  They are supposed to be at least twelve inches high and these are only eleven.  I ran out of bricks and am feeling antsy to fill them up and get planting.  If I find that they are too short to work well I can always add more rows of bricks next summer.  Now let's see if I can grow anything other than just tomatoes this year!

Saturday, April 23, 2016

Sofi's T-Shirt Rag Rug

In order to keep costs down as much as possible I'm making everything in Sofia's new bedroom myself.  That last statement is only partly true.  I actually enjoy making stuff and I get all warm and fuzzy feeling when people compliment the things I make.  So, although I am cheap I am also a compliment hog.  There, full disclosure!  The first thing I am making for Sofi Sue is her rug.  I can't get in the room yet to make her loft so I have to start small with things I can make and store until the guest bedroom/Tim's office furniture gets moved out.  I first saw Laura from xoelle.com's tutorial a couple of years ago.

larch hook and toes
The diy for this rug at xoelle.com made me start collecting old t-shirts immediately!

I didn't know where I would put the rug I planned on making, I just knew that I had to have it!  I started collecting white t-shirts at rummage sales and also got a few from my friend Sari.  If you shop on the second day of a rummage sale they almost always have a bag sale to get rid of their extra inventory.  For $5 you can fill up a bag with whatever you want, and I wanted t-shirts!  After over a year of collecting t-shirts I finally had enough to make a good sized rug, as well as finally having an idea of which room to put the rug.  In.  Where on earth does the word in go in that sentence?  Anyway, I also now knew that the rug would be pink to go with Sofi Sue's color scheme.  But the latch hook method didn't end up working out for me.  Instead I used This tutorial from thehappyhousewife.com .  I already had the old towels so over the course of a several of months I cut my t-shirts, dyed them, and sewed them onto the towels.

Almost finished with my t-shirt scraps

You have to scrunch the t-shirt strips up to make the rug fluffier.  This rug is all about being fluffy!

At this point sewing the rug was getting a little unwieldy.

Halfway there.


I only worked between a half an hour to an hour a day, otherwise this project wouldn't have taken me quite so long. I ran out of pink t-shirt strips partway through, but luckily found that I had stashed more white t-shirts under my craft table.  After another run to Joann Fabrics I had enough pink dye to finish off the rug.  And so at least a year and a half (I am underestimating here) after hatching a plan to make this rug it is finally done!

This rug is a little under 4' by 4'.  I was hoping for larger but didn't want to cut and dye any more t-shirts!
 Sofi had better use this rug until she moves out of the house!

Saturday, April 16, 2016

BM Simply White vs BM Decorators White vs BM Super White


 I can't believe I have turned into one of those people who spend long periods of time debating the merits of different shades of white.  White is white, right?  I am finding out that this is not true.  First I researched white paint colors online.  Then I got a few sample pots and slapped them up on the walls in the living and dining rooms.  I joked with the lady behind the paint counter at Home Depot that I would get home and not be able to tell the difference between the three whites I was wasting money on.  But after putting them on the wall I was completely surprised to find that none of the colors even seemed terribly white to me!  Simply White was a gorgeous white in the dining room but definitely a cream in the living room.  Super White was a beautiful light grey that I would have considered back when I wanted a grey living room.  And Decorators White comes across as having a definite color but I'm not sure what, maybe a violet grey or blue?  Either way, I've ruled out Super White and would go with Decorator's white as being the most crisp and clean, which is what I want, except for how lovely Simply White looks in the dining room.  If it looked that way in the living room as well the decision would already be made.  I think I need a bigger swatch!

BM Decorator's White

BM Simply White
BM Super White

Friday, April 15, 2016

Filling the Gap

Everybody loves surprises; surprise parties, surprise gifts, surprise sundaes (that last one isn't really a thing, but it should be).  But surprises while doing a home renovation are not as much fun.  I pulled the molding off from around the large door connecting my living and dining rooms in preparation for installing the bookshelves that are going to live there.  Look at the wonderful surprise the last home owner left me!



Evidently the door opening used to be an inch or so larger.  I like large door openings, but I've already made the built in bookshelves that will go floor to ceiling as well as over the top of the door.  I can't change the size of the door at this late stage so I will just have to fill the gap.  The fun never ends with this house!

Filling the Gap, Part 2

Thursday, April 14, 2016

Choosing Paint Colors: The Never Ending Story

I currently have 9 paint colors on the walls in my living room.

Soon I'll be adding some yellow swatches to decide on for the built in bookshelves

And I have 10 colors on the wall in the dining room.


I actually decided on the dining room color pretty quickly, but every time I come up with a new contender for the living room I have to put it up in the dining room as well to make sure that it doesn't clash.  The two rooms have a large opening connecting them so I want to make sure that they go together well.  This was not something that I ever bothered with in the old house, which is how I had bright yellow, red, chocolate brown, orange, mossy green, and dove grey all on the same level.  I love color, but I think that for this new house I will try to be a little more grown up with my paint choices and not just splash the rainbow willy-nilly on the walls.

I had originally decided on a light grey for the living room.  It took me months to decide on Sherwin Williams Eider White.  But even after deciding that it was the grey that I liked the best I still felt uncertain in my choice.  Finally, yesterday, I realized that the reason I was uneasy was that I had made the wrong choice!  Funny how that works.  I have already painted my ceiling in both the living and dining rooms a nice light blue.  Putting a light grey on the wall sounds nice in theory, but in our old home our bedroom was light grey with a blue ceiling and I never did like how it looked.  That ceiling was a lot darker, more of a turquoise, but it always felt very cold to me.  I just didn't like the combination.  I don't know why I thought I'd like it better here.  If I hadn't painted the ceiling blue and had done a nice white instead, then the light grey would have looked awesome.  But the ceiling is blue, and the built in will probably be yellow, so having a grey thrown into the mix seemed too much to me.  I realized that what would look excellent would be white!  Painting a room white would have been sacrilegious to me 5 to 10 years ago, but now it just seems like it would be so fresh and bright.  I've already painted all of the basement white, mainly because I put in bright green foam floors and felt that I already had reached my color quota on the flooring.  But I like it, and although I am not prepared to go white in every room of the house I do think it will look nice in this situation.  Now, to decide which color white!